Daniel Krauthammer Wiki, Age, Married

Published on: Mar 17, 2019 @ 08:59 AM

Writer/Journalist Daniel Krauthammer is all too wary of the expectations placed on him by the world in large because of his lineage.

The son of late Pulitzer Prize laureate Charles Krauthammer, to his credit, shattered them all and went on to carve a legacy of his own. A closer inspection of his wiki shall help to understand it better!

Wiki: Age, Parents & Education

Born in 1986 in America to journalist Charles and his wife Robyn Trethewey, Daniel grew up idolizing his parents from a young age.

As the Krauthammer family's only child, it was evident that he would follow his father's footstep. But first, he needed the right qualification for the journey.

After earning his high school degree in 2003, he enrolled at the prestigious Harvard University's Social Studies programme. For his Master's though, he went to the University of Oxford, where he earned MSc in Financial Economics.

To further strengthen his education background, Daniel - now age 32 - joined the Stanford University Graduate School of Business' revered MBA course.

Net Worth

By the time of his graduation from Standford in 2015, Daniel was already working as a contributing writer for prominent publications such as The Washington Post, National Review, and The New Republic.

Before that, he worked as a VP of Business Operations at RadPad, Product Management & Analysis at Google Ideas, Analyst at Inter-American Development Bank as well as Summer Research Analyst at National Institute of Health.

Or perhaps, Daniel never found what his parents had - a true devotion for each other's well being. Married for almost 44 years, Charles & Robyn embodied the phrase "perfect husband-wife duo" like no other.

Quick Facts On Daniel Krauthammer

His father was Canadian while his mother was an Australian.

Between 2010 and 2013, the 32-year-old journo worked as independent Writer & Producer in Hollywood.

A year before his birth, in 1985, his dad won the coveted Pulitzer Prize.

In the book Things That Matter, Charles credited Daniel for keeping him "intellectually honest."